Thursday, June 28, 2012

KivuWatt Project


Turning “Killer Lakes” Into Life-Changing Energy



Sitting in the middle of a serene lake, in a homemade wooden dugout canoe with lights from the lanterns flickering while fishing at night for herring, is how many villagers make their living in Central Africa.  All the while, way down in the depths, lay a killer waiting to erupt and destroy everything in its path.  However, this “so-called” killer is also full of promise for millions of people needing it for life-changing energy. 

There are three exploding lakes, otherwise known as “Killer Lakes”, in the world and they are all located in Africa.  Two of the smaller killer lakes are located in West Africa in Cameroon (Lake Nyos & Lake Monoun) and have already erupted in the late 80s. Lake Kivu is located in Central Africa on the borders of Rwanda & Democratic Republic of Congo and is 3000 times bigger and has 350 times as much gas as Lake Nyos. Lake Kivu is at risk for eruption anytime within the next 100 years, all it will take is an earthquake, landslide or huge thunderstorm to stir up the bottom of the lake. Carbon Dioxide has been seeping into Lake Kivu for centuries from the volcanic rock beneath the lake.  The bacterium at the bottom of the lake has been feeding off this carbon dioxide turning some of it into Methane for centuries as well.  Over the past century the saturation of these gases has increased & in the past 30 years the saturation levels of these two gases have increased  to 40%, creating a very unstable environment putting the people, animals and the eco-system itself at risk.  Think of the lake as a soda can, once shaken up and the top has been opened it spews everywhere.  Now think about it on a larger scale and you are looking at CO2 suffocating millions of people and animals and the methane gas igniting and burning everything in its wake. This limnic eruption could basically cause the annihilation of animals, plants and thousands of villages surrounding its shores.

More than two million people live off the shores surrounding Lake Kivu and are hoping for many more centuries of being able to keep their culture alive.  Very few people and businesses have electricity because it is very expensive. This area of Africa has very few energy sources, causes them to use diesel fuel, which can be quite expensive as well.  ContourGlobal has chosen to step in and create the KivuWatt project, which will turn the methane gas in the lake into useable energy for the people of Rwanda.

The KivuWatt project will create a safer place for the people living on the shores of Lake Kivu.  ContourGlobal, a New York based company, will head the project and plan to use four barges placed out about eight miles from shore to extract the gas.  The barges will use risers, which are like giant straws, to extract the gases from around 1000 feet deep.  The methane will be extracted and siphoned to shore where the power plant is located and the carbon dioxide will be re-injected into the lake to avoid releasing greenhouse gases. Kivu’s fisherman hopes extracting the methane will be beneficial to them because they look forward to having electricity for the first time and they also hope it makes the lake safer too for generations to come.  Extracting this methane will give the people at Lake Kivu over 400 years of electricity. 

However, the Rwandan government team that is monitoring the project is worried it might change the chemistry of the lake and have a severe impact on the fish living in the lake causing ecological & economic problems for surrounding Rwandan villages.

Aster, N. (2011, November 23). KivuWatt: Powering Rwanda & averting disaster. Retrieved June 25, 2012, from Triple Pundit: http://www.triplepundit.com/2011/11/kivuwatt-power-rwanda-lake-kivu-methane/
Boiko-Weyrauch, A., & Hugh-Jones, R. (2012, February 13). Lake Kivu gas: Turning an explosion risk into a power source. Retrieved June 25, 2012, from BBC News Magazine: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-16394635
Glass, D. (2007, November 27). Exploding Lakes. Retrieved June 25, 2012, from Indiana Public Media: http://indianapublicmedia.org/amomentofscience/exploding-lakes/
McKie, R. (2009, July 25). Poisonous gas from African lake poses threat to millions. Retrieved June 25, 2012, from The Observer: http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/jul/26/africa-lake-kivu-co2-gas

Monday, June 25, 2012

Rigs to Reefs

Oil & Gas Industry Doing its Part to Presever Marine Life


The scene is like one viewed in a Jacques Cousteau film - Thriving sea life, thousands of fish swimming in and out of a reef,  declared as their own. The environment is booming with life. Some oceanographers would give anything to study it, photographers would kill to shoot it and environmentalists would say it’s a haven which needs to be preserved. This reef is… an oil rig? That’s right! An oil rig, the main tool of the evil oil industry, is a home to thriving sea life.



Many people assume that the impact of offshore oil rigs on marine life is devastating but, in fact, it is quite the contrary.  These active and decommissioned rigs provide a safe haven and plentiful habitat that would otherwise be nonexistent from the Gulf’s ecosystem. 


Thanks to the "Rigs to Reef Program", which is implemented in all five states surrounding the Gulf of Mexico, these eco-friendly rigs have become a permanent fixture to help sustain and strengthen marine life, in turn, saving the industry millions of dollars a year.  Before the program started, in compliance with federal policies & procedures, countless oil rigs had to be disassembled and towed to shore within five years of the decommission process.  This destruction caused a devastating impact on the marine life.  Some of these rigs would be up for years then immediately torn down wiping out an entire habitat of marine life, which was more damaging than a year’s worth of commercial fishing. 



 The owner of each decommissioned rig that participates in the "Rigs to Reef Program" donates 50% of the money that was saved to that state’s artificial reef program and even after this hefty donation they still make a better profit than if they were to destroy the rig itself.  All in all, this program is beneficial to both, the oil industry and the marine life.


Click here to see a recent decommissioning of a Chevron rig for the Rigs to Reef Program.






American Petroleum Institute. (2011). Rigs & Reefs. Retrieved June 20, 2012, from API: American Petroleum Institute: http://www.api.org/environment-health-and-safety/clean-water/oil-spill-prevention-and-response/rigs-reefs.aspx
Kolian, S., & Sammarco, P. (2008, December). ecorigs.org. Retrieved June 20, 2012, from Removal of Offshore Oil & Gas Platforms: http://www.ecorigs.org/Platform%20Removal%20Brief.pdf